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#1149141 (Received by flhurricane at: 5:06 PM 23.Aug.2023)
TCDAT3

Tropical Storm Franklin Discussion Number 13
NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL082023
500 PM EDT Wed Aug 23 2023

Franklin is in the process of emerging off the northern coast of the
Dominican Republic, where surface observations recently showed a
subtle wind shift in the past couple of hours. Earlier, a NOAA
reconnaissance mission flew a counterclockwise route around the
eastern portion of Hispaniola, finding a peak 700-mb wind of 51 kt
at about the time of the prior advisory. An ASCAT-B pass at around
the same time also showed a decent swath of tropical-storm-force
winds along the southern coast of the Dominican Republic. While
Franklin has been inland for some time now, given the lack of much
other data, its winds will remain 35 kt for this advisory. An
Air Force Reserve Reconnaissance mission is soon set to take off
and should provide more data this evening.

Franklin`s motion is now estimated to be north-northeastward at
015/11 kt. A large weakness in the flow north of Franklin should
allow the storm to be steered by mid-level ridging nosing back into
the eastern Caribbean in the short-term, leading to a rather
unusual east-northeastward motion over the next 24-48 hours. Then,
after the remnants of Emily move out of the way, additional ridging
should build back east of Franklin, blocking it from an immediate
track out to sea. The track guidance all show the cyclone bending
back northward for the remainder of the forecast period. While the
track guidance generally agree on this evolution, the details on
when and how sharply this turn is remain to be ironed out.
Ultimately, the consensus aids have changed little this afternoon,
even if the spread in the ensemble guidance is larger than normal,
and the NHC track is very similar to the prior one throughout the
forecast period.

The biggest hindrance limiting Franklin`s initial prospects for
reintensification is continued moderate westerly vertical wind shear
between 15-25 kt for the next 24-48 hours. However, sea-surface
temperatures will be very warm along the forecast track, so this
shear should not be enough to preclude slow intensification during
that time span. Afterwards, an upper-level trough is expected to
cutoff to the southwest of Franklin as the cyclone begins to pivot
northward, and the storm should find itself in a more favorable
upper-level environment. Thus, a faster intensification rate is
anticipated between 72-96 h and Franklin is still expected to become
a significant hurricane by the end of the forecast period. The
intensity forecast is in good agreement with the consensus aids, but
remains lower than some of the more aggressive hurricane-regional
models (HWRF, HAFS-A/B).

KEY MESSAGES:

1. Heavy rainfall from Franklin is expected across much of
Hispaniola into Thursday, which is expected to produce significant
and potentially life-threatening flash and urban flooding as well
as mudslides, particularly over the central Dominican Republic.

2. Franklin is bringing tropical storm conditions to portions of the
Dominican Republic, where Tropical Storm Warnings remain in effect,
and tropical storm conditions are expected to begin within the Turks
and Caicos Islands tonight.


FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS

INIT 23/2100Z 19.8N 70.6W 35 KT 40 MPH...ON THE COAST
12H 24/0600Z 21.4N 70.1W 40 KT 45 MPH
24H 24/1800Z 22.5N 68.8W 45 KT 50 MPH
36H 25/0600Z 23.0N 67.5W 50 KT 60 MPH
48H 25/1800Z 23.3N 66.3W 55 KT 65 MPH
60H 26/0600Z 23.8N 65.6W 60 KT 70 MPH
72H 26/1800Z 24.6N 65.5W 65 KT 75 MPH
96H 27/1800Z 28.0N 67.0W 85 KT 100 MPH
120H 28/1800Z 31.6N 67.4W 90 KT 105 MPH

$$
Forecaster Papin